Alaska Klondike Diary of Elizabeth Robins, 1900

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Author: Victoria J. Moessner

ISBN-10: 0912006994

ISBN-13: 9780912006994

Category: Literary Biography - Diaries & Journals

Among the throngs of gold-seekers rushing to Nome in the summer of 1900 was Elizabeth Robins, well known as an actress prominent on the London stage and on the brink of becoming well known as a novelist and journalist. She traveled alone to the north, seeking not monetary wealth but her brothers, Saxton and especially Raymond, her youngest sibling, whom she feared had fallen under the spell of a dubious religious persuasion. What she actually found provided the raw material for her writing...

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Among the throngs of gold-seekers rushing to Nome in the summer of 1900 was Elizabeth Robins, well known as an actress prominent on the London stage and on the brink of becoming well known as a novelist and journalist. She traveled alone to the north, seeking not monetary wealth but her brothers, Saxton and especially Raymond, her youngest sibling, whom she feared had fallen under the spell of a dubious religious persuasion. What she actually found provided the raw material for her writing and political activism during the rest of her life.This diary is one of the most engaging, witty, and readable of the accounts surviving from the turn of the century in Alaska and the Yukon. Robins not only reveals the perceptions of a woman facing new phases of her own life but also provides vivid portraits of people whose ideas and activities were transforming the north. Booknews Already will known on the London stage, Robins (1862-1952) went to Nome searching for her brother and found material that would fuel her later career as a novelist, journalist, and political activist. Her contemporary account, with photographs, is supported by five magazine articles she wrote during or after the trip, a chronology of her life and writing, and an introduction. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknew.com)

\ BooknewsAlready will known on the London stage, Robins (1862-1952) went to Nome searching for her brother and found material that would fuel her later career as a novelist, journalist, and political activist. Her contemporary account, with photographs, is supported by five magazine articles she wrote during or after the trip, a chronology of her life and writing, and an introduction. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknew.com)\ \